A small Red banded wrasse has floated in to say, check out my Zazzle Art Shop for botanically drawn fish designs on various products and apparel! Can fish make good mousepads? you ask. Why, yes they can and do.
Plus, here's a heads-up direct from me to you:
A new Links List has appeared in Secret Moon Art's sidebar column containing a few of my favorite Zazzle Shops - more will be added soon - so do swim over the 'net when you can and visit their wildlife offerings and wonderful nature paintings, too.
Or you may wish to check out my designs at Cafe Press, if you prefer their site.
After all, gift-giving season nears, y'know!
Monday, November 02, 2009
Red banded wrasse says, Fish Art as apparel? Yeah!
Labels:secretmoonart, cosmic art
'view Jude's Zazzle Art Shop',
botanical fish drawings,
favorite Zazzle Shops now listed,
Jude Cowell's Cafe Press Art Shop,
original art,
Red banded wrasse,
secret moon art
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
meander down Blue Winter's Path
Blue Winter's Path will be here soon...
Come browse my Fine Art America Portfolio of drawings before the snows set in!
~:~
Update Dec 21, 2009: my excellent friend, libramoon, has penned a few lines of lovely wintry prose to go with the above scene...I turn you over to libramoon:
Traveling eternal twilight's hidden path
ever verging on ecstatic realization
touch to cold, to wisping snow, to winter
dreams barely beneath faith-scented falling sky
echoing life, sending faint refrain from shadow
beyond the winds of winter's night.
Visit libramoon's e-zine Emerging Visions for cosmically inspired Art and amazing flash Poetry!
Labels:secretmoonart, cosmic art
cosmic art,
Emerging Visions,
Jude Cowell Art at Zazzle,
libramoon,
meander down Blue Winter's Path,
secret moon art
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Are mature artists welcome in the World of Art?
Is it more convenient for the world of Art and art auction houses if mature artists simply retire from their creative pursuits and fade fade away?
Still Prime Time? discusses the topic of artists' later works with Picasso as a prime example of what can happen when creative people dare to age and paint.
Does their work even hold up as being purchase-worthy?
Is the market for their efforts diluted by their extended availability?
Well, read the article for more details, but I say that humankind doesn't create Art as much as use it to express who we really are inside. And I didn't realize there were limitations on it because I thought we were meant to become more of who we are as our lives go on.
Actually some artists, famous and otherwise, use their involvement in the creative process - whatever medium they prefer - as a way of transcending life's difficulties such as illness, lack of resources, a dearth of love, a lonely lifestyle...you know - human problems. And if the world presents someone who wishes to purchase such artwork, who are auction houses or galleries to stop them? Should anyone's age be a factor in the transaction if the eyes are satisfied?
Okay, I'm babbling, and didn't expect to become this animated about the topic. Must be my middle-agedness speaking through a lifelong habit of drawing for which I will not apologize!
So whether you like my creations or not, I shall go on creating them, for not to transcribe the visualized images in my brain onto paper is more of a nuisance than to perpetrate whatever forms a blank sheet of paper conjures...such as this old favorite, Moonrise at the Crossroads, just in time for Oct 7, 2009's 160th anniversary of the mysterious death of Edgar Allan Poe.
Oh! and Halloween approacheth you know.
Then, if you can take a bit of Poetry with your Art, here's a fresh rhyme just published today titled, An Ode to Readers of Poe, so curl up with your wine or tea cup - or your wine in a tea cup - and think of Edgar Allan Poe, Father of the Modern Detective Novel.
Still Prime Time? discusses the topic of artists' later works with Picasso as a prime example of what can happen when creative people dare to age and paint.
Does their work even hold up as being purchase-worthy?
Is the market for their efforts diluted by their extended availability?
Well, read the article for more details, but I say that humankind doesn't create Art as much as use it to express who we really are inside. And I didn't realize there were limitations on it because I thought we were meant to become more of who we are as our lives go on.
Actually some artists, famous and otherwise, use their involvement in the creative process - whatever medium they prefer - as a way of transcending life's difficulties such as illness, lack of resources, a dearth of love, a lonely lifestyle...you know - human problems. And if the world presents someone who wishes to purchase such artwork, who are auction houses or galleries to stop them? Should anyone's age be a factor in the transaction if the eyes are satisfied?
Okay, I'm babbling, and didn't expect to become this animated about the topic. Must be my middle-agedness speaking through a lifelong habit of drawing for which I will not apologize!
So whether you like my creations or not, I shall go on creating them, for not to transcribe the visualized images in my brain onto paper is more of a nuisance than to perpetrate whatever forms a blank sheet of paper conjures...such as this old favorite, Moonrise at the Crossroads, just in time for Oct 7, 2009's 160th anniversary of the mysterious death of Edgar Allan Poe.
Oh! and Halloween approacheth you know.
Then, if you can take a bit of Poetry with your Art, here's a fresh rhyme just published today titled, An Ode to Readers of Poe, so curl up with your wine or tea cup - or your wine in a tea cup - and think of Edgar Allan Poe, Father of the Modern Detective Novel.
Labels:secretmoonart, cosmic art
aging artists,
art auction houses,
Edgar Allan Poe,
mature artists still creating,
Moonrise at the Crossroads,
Picasso,
Poetry about Poe,
visionary art
Thursday, October 01, 2009
A Private Art Show for SkyWriter Readers!
Here are 7 drawings with astrological flavorings by Jude Cowell - you'll see that #5 is my illustration of the Sabian Symbol for 12 Cancer:
1. Pattillo Armadillo and the Dream of Green (children's book cover)
2. Diluvian Flux
3. Chiron Returns 2027-28
4. Neptune Ascends
5. A Chinese Woman Nursing a Baby with a Message
6. Lonely Wanderer (leaves his cave to share The Light)
7. Timeless Path (city Merit Award recipient, 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games)
Click an image to enlarge:
So who's Pattillo Armadillo? His dummy book was under consideration in 2004 a New York publishing house, but his hero's journey North didn't quite fit their list at that time. Kudos for the illustrations though!
Many thanks to you, Donna Cunningham, and your SkyWriter readers for browsing my Astrology-tinged Cosmic and Moon Art drawings!
Jude Cowell
10.1.09 @7:40 pm edt
All images copyrighted by artist 2009+
Labels:secretmoonart, cosmic art
Art with Astrology,
astrology,
Chiron Returns,
cosmic art,
Donna Cunningham,
Jude Cowell Art,
SkyWriter,
Timeless Path,
When Art and Astrology Combine
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Primula vialii says, 'view Jude's Zazzle Art Shop'
Here's a small clump of Primula vialii swaying under the moonlight with a fairy visitor nearby...
And be sure to check out my brand new Art Shop at Zazzle when you feel an Art browse coming on.
There you'll find Dreamyfish Wall Art Posters at the moment, and you're welcome to use Zazzle's spiffy Customize It! button to morph my designs into whatever products you wish...just click on the image you'd like to work with and Voila! we're design buds!
Cosmic, Moon, and Fairy images are coming to my Zazzle Shop very soon, so do check back often with a hopeful gleam in your aesthetically sensitive eye...
Jude Cowell 9.29.09
All Art copyrighted 2009+ so please play nice.
Labels:secretmoonart, cosmic art
'view Jude's Zazzle Art Shop',
botanical drawing,
Dreamyfish Art,
fairy art,
flower art,
Jude Cowell Art,
Jude Cowell at Zazzle,
primula vialii,
Wall Art Posters by Jude Cowell,
Zazzle Art Shop
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